processing-chain

processing-chain provides a convenient way to seamlessly set up processing chains for large amounts of data.

Please read the API documentation on docs.rs or take a look at the examples.

processing-chain is based on the concept of Item which is an abstraction that is used to spawn all the processes in parallel. All the user needs to do is define:

processing-chain will take care of spawning the process across all Items via parallelization. The user can also provide some extra processing configuration information (e.g., overwrite).

Highlights

Define the Items

Using a JSON file json [ { "name": "item_1", "input_item_paths": ["test_1.npy", "test_2.npy", "test_2.npy"], "output_item_paths": ["output_1.nc"] }, { "name": "item_2", "input_item_paths": ["test_1.npy", "test_2.npy"], "output_item_paths": ["output_2.nc"] }, { "name": "item_3", "input_item_paths": ["test_6.npy", "test_7.npy", "test_8.npy"], "output_item_paths": ["output_3.nc"] } ]

Write the _process_item function

In rust: ```rust fn processitem(item: &Item) -> Result { // define how to process a single item println!( "Processing {} {:?} -> {:?}", item.name, item.inputitempath, item.outputitempath ); // ...

Ok(true)

} If your function is written in Python and you don't feel like converting it to Rust (yet), you could use the [inline-python](https://crates.io/crates/inline-python) crate. rust use inline_python::python;

fn processitem(item: &Item) -> Result { // define how to process a single item python! { print("Processing {} {} -> {}".format('item.name, item.inputitempath, item.outputitempath)) }; // ...

Ok(true)

} `` Some examples can be found [here`](https://github.com/giorgiosavastano/process/blob/main/examples).